• J Trauma · Oct 2010

    Diagnosis of unstable cervical spine injuries: laboratory support for the use of axial traction to diagnose cervical spine instability.

    • Babak S Kalantar, John A Hipp, Charles A Reitman, Niv Dreiangel, and Peleg Ben-Galim.
    • Spine Research Laboratory, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Administration Medical Center and Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
    • J Trauma. 2010 Oct 1;69(4):889-95.

    BackgroundThe ability to detect damage to the intervertebral structures is critical in the management of patients after blunt trauma. A practical and inexpensive method to identify severe structural damage not clearly seen on computed tomography would be of benefit. The objective of this study was to assess whether ligamentous injury in the subaxial cervical spine can be reliably detected by analysis of lateral radiographs taken with and without axial traction.MethodsTwelve fresh, whole, postrigor-mortis cadavers were used for this study. Lateral cervical spine radiographs were obtained during the application of 0 N, 89 N, and 178 N of axial traction applied to the head. Progressive incremental sectioning of posterior structures was then performed at C4-C5 with traction imaging repeated after each intervention. Intervertebral distraction was analyzed using computer-assisted software.ResultsAlmost imperceptible intervertebral separation was found when traction was applied to intact spines. In the subaxial cervical spine, the average posterior disc height consistently increased under traction in severely injured spines. The average disc height increase was 14% of the C4 upper endplate width, compared with an average of 2% in the noninjured spines. A change of more than 5% in posterior disc height under traction was above the 95% confidence interval for intact spines, with sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 80%. Applied force of 89 N (20 lb) was sufficient to demonstrate injury. The combination of assessing alignment and distraction under traction increased both the sensitivity and specificity to nearly 100%.ConclusionThis study supports further clinical investigations to determine whether low-level axial traction may be a useful adjunct for detecting unstable subaxial cervical spine injuries in an acute setting.

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